Mellick v. Mellick

47 N.J. Eq. 86
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 47 N.J. Eq. 86 (Mellick v. Mellick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mellick v. Mellick, 47 N.J. Eq. 86 (N.J. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

PlTNEY, V. C.

By this suit complainant seeks to enforce, by foreclosure, a mortgage dated March 30th, 1877, to secure $5,000 in one year, with privilege of five years, with interest payable semi-annually, given by Joseph Kramer and wife to Henry H. Mellick, and by him assigned to complainant by her maiden name of Emma Keiter. This assignment bears date and was executed and acknowledged April 6th, 1878; and, on the same day, after the execution of the assignment and its delivery, with the bond and mortgage, to the complainant, she and the mortgagee, Henry H. Mellick, were married.

In 1879, Kramer, the mortgagor, failed. Judgments went against him, under executions upon which the mortgaged premises were brought to public sale in 1881, and purchased by Howard Mellick,-the defendant. He does not dispute the validity of the mortgage, but sets up an assignment of it to himself by Henry H. Mellick, the mortgagee, who was his father, which is dated and was executed, acknowledged and duly recorded in the records of the proper county on the 18th of March, 1878, nineteen days prior to the execution of complainant’s assignment.

It thus appears that the real contest is as to which of these two assignments conveyed, as against the other, the superior title to the mortgage in question.

The defendant’s assignment purports to be in consideration of $1 and natural love and affection, with habendum—

to the party of the second part his heirs and assigns, for himself and his and their oivn use, after the death of the party of the first part, on condition that the said Howard Mellick shall pay the interest received by him on said mortgage to the said party of the first part in semi-annual payments during his lifetime.”

Complainant’s assignment recites the bond and mortgage, describes the land covered by it by metes and bounds, and then, in consideration of $1, grants, bargains, sells and assigns to the complainant the bond and mortgage and the lands so described, with the appurtenances, with unrestricted habendum to the complainant, subject to Kramer’s equity of redemption, with these [88]*88words added: “said Mellick to draw the interest during his lifetime.”

The complainant, by her bill, alleges that more than one month before the date of her assignment, and long prior to the date of defendant’s assignment, Henry Mellick agreed with her that, if she would marry him, he would assign to her this bond and mortgage; that the said assignment was made and executed, and, with the bond and mortgage, delivered to her in consideration of such marriage and immediately before the same was solemnized. She further, by her bill, charges that the defendant’s assignment was without any valuable consideration, was procured by the defendant from his father with full knowledge that the latter had contracted to assign the same to her in consideration of their approaching marriage, and was contrived by the father and son for the purpose of defrauding her in that affair, and is, for that reason, fraudulent and void as to her. She further, by her bill, alleges that in August, 1878, the defendant, acting in fraudulent collusion with her husband and Kramer, attempted to obtain possession from her by fraud of said bond and mortgage, and for that purpose, pretending a desire to endorse a payment of interest on the bond, asked complainant to produce both instruments for that purpose; that she did produce the bond and handed it to Kramer, who, after endorsing the payment on it, handed it -to the defendant, who has since retained possession of it; and that Kramer handed her back, in place of it, an old canceled bond of Howard Mellick to his father.

Defendant, by his answer, denies complainant’s allegation as to her assignment being given in consideration of marriage and the like, and puts her upon proof. As to his own assignment, he does not, by his answer, assert that it had any other consideration than that expressed in it. He further denies the allegations of the bill charging him with knowledge of the intended marriage, and of the alleged preliminary contract between complainant and his father to settle the bond and mortgage on her at their marriage; and he denies that his assignment was procured for the purpose of defrauding complainant. He also denies all complicity in the trick by which the possession of the bond [89]*89was procured from complainant. He alleges that the bond and mortgage were delivered to him by his father on the 18th of March, and placed by him in his safe, to which, however, his father had access, and were taken therefrom by his father surreptitiously and without his knowledge, and their absence •from the safe was -not discovered by him until after his father was married, and, when discovered, he called his father’s attention to it, and that he confessed that he had taken them and-promised to return them, and did return the bond.

He further sets out in his answer, that after the marriage and -after complainant had separated herself from his father, the latter was without any means of living except the interest on the bond -and mortgage, and that

'“lie thereupon came to defendant and agreed to and with this defendant, that if this defendant would furnish to him a home with comfortable room, lodging and board for and during the term of the natural life of him the said Henry H. Mellick, that the same would be accepted by him the said: Henry H. Mellick an full payment and satisfaction of ike interest which he the said Henry H. Melliek .had or was entitled in and on the said bond and mortgage which he had assigned to the defendant” &c.,

and “ that he, the defendant, agreed with the said H. H. M. to furnish him board ” &c., in consideration of the said interest in and on said bond and mortgage ” &c., and that, in pursuance of said agreement, defendant did furnish his father with such living Ac. during his natural life;

and, in addition thereto, this defendant furnished said H. H. M. his clothing and several sums of money, amounting in the whole to the sum of §1,400 or thereabouts, which stands charged on this defendant’s book against the said H. H. M., and that, in addition, he paid the funeral expenses of the burial of his father (who died just before the filing of the bill) and the amount whereof ought to be decreed to be deducted from any amount which shall be ascertained to be due in any wise from this defendant to H. H. M-, if any such decree shall be made.”

These citations from the answer have been given thus at length because they will appear to have an important bearing on the case as further developed.

[90]*90The part of the answer set up as a cross-bill states that the existence of the uncanceled record of the mortgage is a cloud upon the defendant’s title; that the instrument is wrongfully retained by complainant, and should be given up to him to be canceled, and prays accordingly.

At the hearing and argument the allegations and proofs of the parties took a range somewhat wider and, as to the defendant, decidedly variant from that marked out by the pleadings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 N.J. Eq. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mellick-v-mellick-njch-1890.